Mind
- Nux vom.
- Ailments after continual mental labor.
- Silic.
- Yielding mind, faint-hearted, anxious mood.
- Arg. nit.
- Always hurried, time passes too slowly, must walk fast, etc.
- Anac. orient.
- Great weakness of memory. Mania with inclination to horrible swearing.
- Staph.
- When the mind has been dwelling too much on sexual subjects.
- Nux vom.
- Hypochondriasis with studious men; sitting too much at home; with abdominal complaints and constipation.
- Ignat.
- Sadness and sighing with sobs and tears and will not be comforted, wants to be alone. Silent grief.
- Phos. acid.
- Ailments from grief (chronic) or disappointed love. Apathetic, listless.
- Aethusa.
- Inability to think or fix attention, idiocy, alternating with furor.
- Sulph.
- Melancholic mood; dwelling on religious things; anxious to save his soul.
- Staph.
- Very sensitive to the least impression, the least word seems wrong, hurts her very much.
- Ant. crud.
- Sentimental mood in the moonlight, particularly estatic love.
- Verat. alb.
- Mania with desire to cut and tear, especially clothes, with lewdness and lascivious talk, or praying and talking about religious things.
- Staph.
- Throws things away indignantly, or pushes them away on the table.
- Opium
- Complete loss of consciousness, with slow, stertorous breathing; insensibility to external impressions.
- Bellad.
- Fear of imaginary things, wants to run away from them.
- Hyos
- Entire loss of consciousness; sees persons who are not, and have not been present; loss of sight and hearing.
- Cup. met.
- Delirium, with biting in the bedclothes, their own hands, or the hands of others.
- Nux vom.
- Over-sensitiveness, every harmless word offend, every little noise frightems, anxious and beside themselves; they cannot bear the least, even suitable medicine.
- Sepia.
- Aversion to occupation; indifference to her family; irritable and easily offended; memory weak; uterine troubles.
- Verat. alb.
- Despairs of her salvation; with suppressed catamenia.
- Ant crud.
- The child cannot bear to be touched or looked at; cross.
- Ignat.
- Amiable disposition if feeling well; every little emotion disturbs them.
- Opium.
- Drunkenness with stupor, as if from smoke; eyes hot, dry and burning.
- Fluor. acid.
- Aversion to all about him, even his own family; sends his nurses from the room.
- Sulphur
- The most ordinary objects awake extraordinary admiration.
- Verat. alb.
- Disposed to talk about the faults of others; or silent; but if irritated, scolding and calling names.
- Ant. crud.
- The greatest sadness and woeful mood, with intermittent fever.
- Lil. tig.
- Constant hurried feeling, as if of imperative duties, and utter inability to perform them.
- Ars. alb.
- Hears voices and sees animals after having taken alcohol often, in small doses.
- Petrol.
- Thinks another person lies along side of him, or that one limb is double (delusion in typhoid).
- Dulcam.
- Cannot find the right word for a thing.
- Opium
- After a fright, with fear; convulsions, or the head hot, and twitching around the mouth.
- Staph
- Great imagination about things done by others, or himself; grieving about the consequence; continually concerned about the future.
- Verat. alb.
- Despairs about his position in society; feels very unlucky.
- Nux mos.
- Thoughtless; slow thinking; irresolute; changing of the mind.
- Ars. alb.
- Very great anguish and restlessness; cannot rest anywhere, moves from place to place; wants to go from one bed to another.
- Bryon.
- Very irritable, inclined to be angry, chilly, or a red face and heat in the head.
- Calc. ost.
- Despairing, hopeless of ever getting well again, with fear of death, tormenting all around him day and night.
- Anac. orient.
- Feels as though he had two wills; one commanding him to do what the other forbids.
- Calc. phos.
- Feels complaints more when thinking of them.
- Opium.
- After a fright, the fear of the fright still remaining.
- Opium.
- Delirious, talking, eyes wide open, face red and puffed up.
- Calc. ost.
- Fear of going crazy, or that people will observe her and think her crazy.
- Ars. alb.
- Fear of death, of being left alone, great restlessness and utter prostration.
- Picric acid.
- Great indifference and lack of will power to do anything.
- Aconite.
- After a fright with vexation, particularly during catamenia (to prevent suppression).
- Platina.
- Arrogant, proud, haughty, looks down with pitiful contempt on others and everything.
- Hyos.
- Involuntary loud laughter, with silly actions, convulsive trembling.
- Coff. crud.
- Pains insupportable, driving him to despair.
- Cham.
- Exceedingly cross and irritable, can hardly answer civilly, snappish, short-spoken.
- Coloc.
- Does not like to talk, to answer, or to see friends, or anybody.
- Plumbum.
- Loss of memory so that while talking he could not find the proper word.
- Phosphorus.
- Fear of being alone.
- Hyos.
- Muttering, with picking of the bed-clothes.
- Ant. tart.
- Child wants to be carried, but cries if anyone touches it, will not let you feel the pulse.
- Coff. crud.
- Affections after sudden emotions, particularly pleasant surprises.
- Apis.
- Sudden, shrill, piercing screams (awake or sleeping).
- Cicuta.
- Excessive moaning and howling; does rash and absurd things, is very violent in all actions.
- Stram.
- Excessive loquacity during the menses, face bloated with blood, with tears and prayers and earnest supplications.
- Phos. ac.
- Very weak, and indifferent to the affairs of life; listless; apathetic.
- Hep. sulph.
- Over-sensitiveness and irritatability, quick, hasty speech, hasty drinking, etc.
- China.
- Full of plans, projects and schemes, especially in the evening and night.
- Borax.
- Dread of downward motion, with anxious expression, as when in a swing, rocking chair, cradle, when mother goes to lay the child down out of her arms.
- Lach.
- Thinks herself under super-human control.
- Psorin
- Hopeless, and despairing of recovery, gives up all hope, thinks he will die.
- Nat. mur.
- Sad and weeping, consolation aggravates and a fluttering of the heart follows.
- Dulc.
- Inclination to scold without being angry.
- Glonoine.
- Confusion, cannot tell where he is; well known streets seem strange; forgets on which side of the street he lives.
- Borax.
- Fright at the least unusual sound; springs and starts at them.
- Anac. orient.
- Ugly, irritable, desire to curse and swear.
- Dulc.
- Inarticulate speaking from swollen tongue, but talks incessantly.
- Pulsat.
- Mild, gentle and yielding disposition; cries at everything, is sad and despondent; weeps about everything; can hardly give her symptoms from weeping.
- Apis.
- Very busy; restless; changing the kind of work with awkwardness, dropping and breaking things.
- Arnica.
- Fear of being touched by persons coming towards him.
- Hyos.
- Lascivious furor, without modesty; wishes to uncover and expose herself.
- Baptisia.
- Feels scattered about; cannot sleep because cannot get herself together.
- Aurum.
- Great hopelessness; harassed, with a desire to commit suicide; weary of life.
- Calc. ost.
- Anxious, shuddering; and awe as soon as evening draws near.
- Acon.
- Predicts the day she is to die, in pregnancy or child-bed; fear of death.
- Coff. crud.
- Ecstacy; full of ideas; quick to act; no sleep on this account.
- Anac. orient.
- Loss of memory.
- Cham.
- Great sensitiveness to pains; they are intolerable; thinks she cannot bear them.
- Arnica.
- Sullen, morose, does not speak a word.
- Arg. nit.
- Impulsive; time passes too slowly; is in a hurry about everything.
- Lach.
- Great sadness; particularly on waking in the morning.
- Stram.
- Young men or women who pray, sing or talk so devoutly or constantly as to excite the sympathy of all in the home.
- Coff. crud.
- All senses more acute; reads fine print easily; hearing, smell, taste, and touch acute, particularly also increased perception of sight; passive motion.
- Baryta carb.
- Great bodily and mental weakness, in old people, childishness.
- Lach.
- Loquaciousness; continually changing from one subject to another.
- Cham.
- Whining, restlessness; child will be quiet only when carried, which seems to relieve it.
- Baptisia.
- Stupor; falls asleep while being spoken to (in fevers).
- Coloc.
- Affections from anger; with indignation, particularly vomiting and diarrhoea.
- Ignat.
- Incredible changes of mood; jesting and laughter changing to sadness and tears ( Nux mosch. ).
- Cham.
- Child wants different things, and repels them when getting them.
- Cina.
- Ill-humoured; cannot be quieted; averse to being caressed; rejects everything offered (children).
- Stram.
- Disposed to talk continually.
- Stram.
- Mania for light and company; cannot bear to be alone; wants hand held.
- Medorrhin.
- Is in great hurry; when doing anything is in such a hurry that it fatigues her.
- Cimic.
- Gloominess and dejection as of a black pall over everything; fears she will be insane.
- Stram.
- Awakens with a shrinking look as if frightened at the first object seen.
- Cann. Ind.
- Very forgetful; begins a sentence and forgets before he can finish it.
- Phos.
- Anxious and fearful before and during a thunder storm.
- Cann. Ind.
- Laughs immoderately; full of fun and mischief; when sad afterwards.
- Kali bromat.
- Loss of memory; had to be told word before he could speak it.
- Kali bromat.
- Night terrors of children, with screaming; cannot recognize nor be comforted by friends; sometimes followed by squinting.
- Calc. phos.
- Feels complaints more when thinking of them ( Helon. , Ox. ac. )
- Arg. nit.
- Apprehension when getting ready for church or opera; diarrhoea set in ( Gels. ).
- Bismuth
- Solitude is unbearable, desires company; child hold on to its mother’s hand for company ( Stram. ).
- Bismuth.
- Anguish; sits, walks, lies, never staying long in one place.